lokey / hikey
Determine the low boundary of a certain region.
When a region only covers one note, it is generally more convenient to use
key instead of hikey and lokey. When hikey and lokey are used,
they will usually need to be used together with [pitch_keycenter].
In the SFZ 1 specification, the allowed range is 0 to 127. However, SFZ 2 additionally includes the possibility to set lokey and hikey to -1, to prevent a region from being triggered by any keys. This is a way (though, admittedly, not a very elegant one) to use the on_loccN / onhiccN opcodes to trigger, for example, pedal noises which are triggered whether any keys are pressed or not.
Examples #
<region> sample=*sine lokey=c5 hikey=c6
As with the key opcode, the values can also be MIDI note numbers:
<region> sample=*sine lokey=72 hikey=84
When an instrument is sampled every minor third, this kind of usage will be common:
<region> sample=a4.wav lokey=68 hikey=70 pitch_keycenter=69
<region> sample=c5.wav lokey=71 hikey=73 pitch_keycenter=72
<region> sample=eb5.wav lokey=74 hikey=76 pitch_keycenter=75
[pitch_keycenter]]: pitch_keycenter
| Name | Version | Type | Default | Range | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| lokey | SFZ v1 | integer | 0 | 0 to 127 |
Category: Region Logic, Key Mapping